Pamela Coventry

  


On a cold winter's day in January 1939, nine year old Pamela Coventry came home from school for her midday meal as usual and then set off for the walk back to school for her afternoon lessons.

 Somewhere along that journey she disappeared and her naked and violated body was found in a ditch the next day. Scotland Yard led the investigation into her murder, and after a couple of weeks 28 year old Leonard Richardson, a married man and father of two young children, was arrested and charged.

The South Croydon Poisonings - "How strange are the coincidences which have harmed my family. It has been said that we must have an enemy who has done all this". So said the beguiling Grace Duff as members of her family died one by one. Was she right, or was the truth closer to home? Read this intriguing true crime mystery and decide for yourself. 

 The Rotherham Trunk Murder - When she was a child, the author’s grandma told her a secret about a murder committed by somebody that she knew. Reading a local history book in 2014, the author was shocked to find that a man called Andrew Bagley was hanged for the sexual assault and murder of 16 year old Irene Hart in 1936.

 That was not the person that her grandma had named as the killer.
Falsely Accused - What must it feel like to be arrested and accused of a murder that you didn’t commit? In this book, three such men - falsely accused - were eventually acquitted and freed by the justice system but were they ever truly “free” again? It would appear that sometimes the “Court of Public Opinion” is a far harsher critic than any Court of Justice.

 If the community decides that “there is no smoke without fire” and that you “got away with murder” there is no need for any real evidence to be produced or for the benefit of an assumption of innocence to be given. In their eyes you are guilty and always will be. What effect does that have on your life?

North Yorkshire Moors Murders - An Anthology Of True Crime “North Yorkshire Moors Murders” is a collection of fascinating true crimes from this most picturesque part of England. With its quaint market towns, old fishing villages, rugged cliffs tumbling down to sandy beaches and the hidden bays of the East Coast, the stunning beauty of the North Yorkshire countryside and coast is hard to beat.

 Nowadays, many roads criss-cross the area, but in the 19th century, when the crimes in this book were committed, farms and villages were isolated and the beautiful wild moors were the perfect hiding place for those with murder in mind.
Edwin, Adelaide & George: The Bizarre Bartlett Poisoning - The story of Adelaide Bartlett, her husband Edwin and the Reverend George Dyson, is one of the most bizarre and puzzling in British Criminal history.

 The author tells the story, examines the trial evidence and puts forward a new theory to explain this strange and disturbing Victorian murder mystery.
The Abdy Farm Murders: Updated: Sensational new "evidence" from beyond the grave - On the 15th of November 1912, two young cousins, ten year old Amy Collinson and seven year old Frances Nicholson were brutally murdered on their way home from a rehearsal for a Christmas concert. Amy had also been raped.

 A 24 year old man called Walter Sykes was soon arrested, tried and executed, but local people thought that Sykes was innocent and that Amy's foster father, Arthur Collinson, was the perpetrator of this horrendous crime. More than a hundred years later, local people still believe that to be true. 

The author examines all the evidence to try to answer the question as to who committed the crime. Was it Walter Sykes? Was it Arthur Collinson? Or was it someone else? Examine the evidence, and see what you think.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jeannette-Hensbys-True-Crime-Omnibus-ebook/dp/B09KXZ9BBF/ref=sr_1_2?crid=3URKRSNQYD8HY&keywords=jeannette+hensby&qid=1681710902&sprefix=jeannette+hensby%2Caps%2C79&sr=8-2


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